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Mar 12, 2012
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we thought, in fact, we were limiting the authority that the president has under existing law. but it, it -- there was such an emotional reaction to it from people who value their freedom of communication on the internet, which senator collins and i do too, that we just decided we should leave that section out. it was too much of a distraction, and it could bring down the overall bill which, to me, is urgently necessary. so no kill switch. >> host: how to you draft a cybersecurity bill and keep up with the ever-changing technology that it's drafted to legislate? >> guest: we had extensive conversations with the high-tech companies, the security firms, the innovators, and many of them because of changes we've made in the bill are now accepting of the bill. i think industry is always leery of any new legislation. but they recognize that their products need to be kept up with the threat and that there is much in this bill in the information sharing, for example, that will help them better protect their systems. there's nothing in this bill that in any way stifles innovation. in fa
we thought, in fact, we were limiting the authority that the president has under existing law. but it, it -- there was such an emotional reaction to it from people who value their freedom of communication on the internet, which senator collins and i do too, that we just decided we should leave that section out. it was too much of a distraction, and it could bring down the overall bill which, to me, is urgently necessary. so no kill switch. >> host: how to you draft a cybersecurity bill...
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Dec 29, 2012
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burmese people live under a fully democratic government that is transparent and respect the rule of law we must continue to push for reform. suu kyi said in oslo she accepted the nobel peace prize, quote, the piece of the world is as long as negative forces, the better forces anywhere for all at risk. every citizen of the world including those who live in the most free and safest conditions of the debt of gratitude to the helpful souls who put their lives on the line for democracy and freedom. there is no better example of that than the guest we have here today. [applause] >> ladies and gentlemen, the united states secretary of state, the hon. hillary rodham clinton. [applause] >> 17 years ago, as we were in beijing on behalf of the un conference concerning the rights of women, we fought about many of the women around the world who could not be with us but whose presence was a strong message of the values that we were promoting, values that were not just american values but universal values. madeleine albright left that conference in beijing, taking with harry poster signed by all the a
burmese people live under a fully democratic government that is transparent and respect the rule of law we must continue to push for reform. suu kyi said in oslo she accepted the nobel peace prize, quote, the piece of the world is as long as negative forces, the better forces anywhere for all at risk. every citizen of the world including those who live in the most free and safest conditions of the debt of gratitude to the helpful souls who put their lives on the line for democracy and freedom....
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Sep 16, 2012
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in this book. >> natural law is an easy turn to use to people who are not religious, who believe in the ability to be free of any course of restraint some other people that are redstone come from government, they come from our any humanity to reassess latter-day saints we believe that god exists, has given us these rights. we derive them from him. if you talk to an atheist, agnostic, someone who may be -- some natural law is a different definition of the same underlying principle, and that is our rights come from us and not from government. whether we receive this race because of our any humanity in the fact a real human beings or because we are god's children, the precedent being, how those rights came to us but not so much important in terms of what government should do as is the fact that government has not given us those rights, we have delegated to government certain powers. it is a great way to kind of unified people around the message of liberty whether they believe that our liberty comes from god are not. >> connor boyack come as a libertarian and mormon, how do you come dow
in this book. >> natural law is an easy turn to use to people who are not religious, who believe in the ability to be free of any course of restraint some other people that are redstone come from government, they come from our any humanity to reassess latter-day saints we believe that god exists, has given us these rights. we derive them from him. if you talk to an atheist, agnostic, someone who may be -- some natural law is a different definition of the same underlying principle, and...
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Sep 17, 2012
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>>host: why do you write about natural law? >> it is an easy term for those were not religious those to be freed from restraints in the right side come from the humanity so god has given us the rights. view talk to that acs is say different definition that the right soon come from us, not government. the fact we're human beings who are we are god's children, how the rights came to us is not important as is the fact government has not given us the rights it is a great way to unify the message whether we believe they come from god or 97 as a libertarian and mormon, john corvino how do come down on gay marriage, the war on drugs? >>guest: important issues. the first part is principals in theology for liberty. my dedicate one chapter to the war on drugs. it is easy to believe it is good, the drug czar bad bad, cocaine will be sold on every street corner if we legalize. what is the proper application? just because you want to grow marijuana plant to the extent it is used as crime then you could talk about government intervention. ev
>>host: why do you write about natural law? >> it is an easy term for those were not religious those to be freed from restraints in the right side come from the humanity so god has given us the rights. view talk to that acs is say different definition that the right soon come from us, not government. the fact we're human beings who are we are god's children, how the rights came to us is not important as is the fact government has not given us the rights it is a great way to unify...
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Feb 26, 2012
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in nevada that you can home school your children, but the law should say you can't home school unless you're more than 50 miles away from the school. my son had just failed kindergarten, he was feeling very defeated, and i knew as an educator that i had solutions for him. and when the judge, the government told me you cannot provide the solutions for your family, that set me on the course. >> host: do you see yourself running for office again? >> guest: possibly. i've not ruled anything out. i've not even ruled anything out for this cycle, and so i'm kind of waiting to see the cause that we've donated the money to for this book is a twofold mission. first is to make sure that we have senators elected that changes the majority to a
in nevada that you can home school your children, but the law should say you can't home school unless you're more than 50 miles away from the school. my son had just failed kindergarten, he was feeling very defeated, and i knew as an educator that i had solutions for him. and when the judge, the government told me you cannot provide the solutions for your family, that set me on the course. >> host: do you see yourself running for office again? >> guest: possibly. i've not ruled...
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Nov 28, 2012
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. >> washburn worked his way up, went to harvard law school and at the origin of one of his brothers immigrated out west to the illinois to clean up where the mining industry was in its heyday. he arrived after about a month's journey by ship, by stagecoach, by train, arrived in a steamboat in this muddy mining town, bordered himself and a log cabin, and slowly worked his way up and became a very successful lawyer and got involved politically, ran for congress, served eight terms and befriended abraham lincoln and ulysses s. grant and as they rose, washburn stayed with them as a colleague during the civil war and after grant was elected president initially appointed washburn secretary of state and washburn became very ill, after ten days he submitted his resignation to president grant show grant regretfully had his resignation and he regained his health which was always very fragile and grant the then offered him the position as minister of france, ambassador of france. >> michael hill on washburn, minister to france in the 1870 franco prussian war, and the only power of the state pr
. >> washburn worked his way up, went to harvard law school and at the origin of one of his brothers immigrated out west to the illinois to clean up where the mining industry was in its heyday. he arrived after about a month's journey by ship, by stagecoach, by train, arrived in a steamboat in this muddy mining town, bordered himself and a log cabin, and slowly worked his way up and became a very successful lawyer and got involved politically, ran for congress, served eight terms and...
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Jul 1, 2012
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i actually think the bill's going to be fine -- >> law. >> the law. it's going to be fine for big pharma and big insurance. i think -- that's why, you know, big pharma spent $150 million lobbying for this bill. they showed up at the white house. went over and met with the president and came out with all sorts of agreements to spend money in campaigning for this bill because they know every insurance plan in america has to coffer their prescription drugs, there's going to be a whole bunch of new expansions in medicare for them, they're going to have brand name drugs covered under the doughnut hole where they were going to generics and stuff. so they came out ahead. big insurance, you know, they dropped the public option, and they got a mandate that people have to buy their product. a $70 billion a year bailout for the insurance industry. now, the small and medium companies can't comply, they're going to go out of business, but that's great for the big insurance companies who are going to control the last little bit of the market. the ama lobbied in fav
i actually think the bill's going to be fine -- >> law. >> the law. it's going to be fine for big pharma and big insurance. i think -- that's why, you know, big pharma spent $150 million lobbying for this bill. they showed up at the white house. went over and met with the president and came out with all sorts of agreements to spend money in campaigning for this bill because they know every insurance plan in america has to coffer their prescription drugs, there's going to be a whole...
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Aug 4, 2012
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shea talked-about repealing the health care law and the federal budget. >> in california at this point the party doesn't have a single statewide elected official in the legislature, losing even 1/3. for those who watched that over the years is clear one of the biggest reasons is the allegation in california and on the national front what seems to be developing. lot has to do with immigration. are you going to try to bring immigration? >> any immigration bill that you do is going to have to be bipartisan. you watch the end of the george bush administration one was tried and not able to which eve. it is a big challenge for both parties and the big challenge for the nation as a whole. >> we are a country of immigrants. we want to maintain that and we want to maintain and protect our borders. at the same time we want to be the magnet people want to come to as a world. it is a challenge from all. if you take that issue away and look at congress as a whole i am not sure congress regardless of the issue can take massive bills -- you may have to break up the-when you pick up the pieces the pie
shea talked-about repealing the health care law and the federal budget. >> in california at this point the party doesn't have a single statewide elected official in the legislature, losing even 1/3. for those who watched that over the years is clear one of the biggest reasons is the allegation in california and on the national front what seems to be developing. lot has to do with immigration. are you going to try to bring immigration? >> any immigration bill that you do is going to...
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Mar 25, 2012
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or the civil-rights law of under 1964. can with certain circumstances you can do things that make liai yourself, subject yourself to legal liability.e a if you commit violence and in the condition of a violent act refer to people using the the n word you could be subject to the haight law legislation thereby not only be prosecuted for whenever violent act you have committed but you may have an enhanced penaltngy byso, undr running afoul of state hate laws. so yes.gerall in certain circumstances bute generally speaking because of the strong shielding power comedienne's or writers can use the n wordn be a to not fear the law but heybe public opinion. t >> host: is that the mere words purses fighting words one argument? >> guest: is the lot of homicide different levels. the divide is betweengis y manslaughter and second you degree murder.hat if you kill someone thatso make the argument you are inmp the grip of passion you comeor home to find your girlfriend of or your wife in the arms of another and kill that person.iveou a i
or the civil-rights law of under 1964. can with certain circumstances you can do things that make liai yourself, subject yourself to legal liability.e a if you commit violence and in the condition of a violent act refer to people using the the n word you could be subject to the haight law legislation thereby not only be prosecuted for whenever violent act you have committed but you may have an enhanced penaltngy byso, undr running afoul of state hate laws. so yes.gerall in certain circumstances...
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Feb 27, 2012
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in order to comply with federal law. that is why this law must not stand. if the court oppose it, that will be back at the ballot box in 2012 in the american people will have the final say on the spot. thank you all very much. that spin that wonderful. i think all three of you for excellent remarks, reminding us again almost two years later the problems that we have this health care law. i just want to underscore another trend we see, which is this is just what we know today. there are still mounds and mounds of regulation and information that we will still have to wait to see. so i think that really underscores the danger of moving forward with this health care that because we even today are not clear as to what the final package will look like. we have time for questions, so please if you have a question producer hand and we'll bring your. one down here and one in the back. let's start down here. >> how to be possible to repeal this thing if you need 60 senators to do it in the most optimistic scenario? >> has written a detailed post on this and not the h
in order to comply with federal law. that is why this law must not stand. if the court oppose it, that will be back at the ballot box in 2012 in the american people will have the final say on the spot. thank you all very much. that spin that wonderful. i think all three of you for excellent remarks, reminding us again almost two years later the problems that we have this health care law. i just want to underscore another trend we see, which is this is just what we know today. there are still...
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Mar 24, 2012
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in order to comply with federal law? that is why this law must not stand. of the court upholds it it will be back at the ballot box in 2012 and the american people are going to have the final say on this all. thank you very much. [applause] >> wonderful. i thank all three if you for excellent remarks and reminding us again two years later the problems we have with this health care law. i want to underscore another trend we see which is this is what we know today. there are mounds of regulation and information we will still have to wait to see. i think that really underscore is the danger of moving forward with this health-care law because we are not clear as to what the final package will look like. .. you really only want the 51 votes that the senate in order to you. most of the major sitting provisions that michael particularly talked about. and you can't spend any money than the rest of the blog really is not going to -- is going to come. so the majority in the house and a member they passed a big piece of this reconciliation and 20 times in order to get
in order to comply with federal law? that is why this law must not stand. of the court upholds it it will be back at the ballot box in 2012 and the american people are going to have the final say on this all. thank you very much. [applause] >> wonderful. i thank all three if you for excellent remarks and reminding us again two years later the problems we have with this health care law. i want to underscore another trend we see which is this is what we know today. there are mounds of...
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Sep 26, 2012
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my point is we don't know what this new law is going to do. it certainly has a lot of new taxes than a lot of good employers in this state who will pay higher taxes. i know one, smiths medical device, which is going to affect a number of employees. these are the things we don't need. my point is we don't need this new lot right now. >> go-ahead. >> you mention are partners, what challenges you faced over the years? >> health care inflation we can't keep up in a small business in new hampshire. i've gone to small businesses all over the state from tire companies in downtown nashua all the way to the papermill and everyone is struggling. they want to be able to provide for employees and is simply unaffordable and unsustainable. i think we need to do is tackle the cost side of this issue. we haven't gotten there and the republicans seem to have no solution for that. they're talking about privatization, which is where they left to go. as of social security, health care, but it's very, very expensive because then the consumers pay not just the admi
my point is we don't know what this new law is going to do. it certainly has a lot of new taxes than a lot of good employers in this state who will pay higher taxes. i know one, smiths medical device, which is going to affect a number of employees. these are the things we don't need. my point is we don't need this new lot right now. >> go-ahead. >> you mention are partners, what challenges you faced over the years? >> health care inflation we can't keep up in a small business...
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Nov 17, 2012
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to do what we did to the law. what i am going to suggest to you is collectively what we do to politics. what we have done to the law. where has the federalist society gone in two decades, it was a different legal world. this organization, talking about the law schools trying to shut down federalist society groups from bringing in speakers. because we are winning the arguments. our ideas are right. go back and read a statutory interpretation case from the 1970s. they begin with we have before us this statutory question, legislative history is as follows. therefore -- go back -- many of those decisions you can't even find in the statutory text in the opinion. may be as a footnote if your interested in what statutes we're talking about here is the citation to it. go look it up. farm more relevant is the subcommittee report and the comments one member of congress have on the subway to get a cup of coffee. originally didn't exist. what did this organization do collectively? we started making the arguments, we started m
to do what we did to the law. what i am going to suggest to you is collectively what we do to politics. what we have done to the law. where has the federalist society gone in two decades, it was a different legal world. this organization, talking about the law schools trying to shut down federalist society groups from bringing in speakers. because we are winning the arguments. our ideas are right. go back and read a statutory interpretation case from the 1970s. they begin with we have before us...
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Nov 17, 2012
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>> not under current law. that's what we need to change it. >> welcome the team that both very much for your time. [applause] >> i am margaret carlton and i approve the panel. >> now, florida governor rick scott talks about governing in florida and its focus on job creation and expanding access to health care. he said the annual lawyers convention in washington d.c. hosted by the federalist society. this year's topic is the future of constitutional law and the supreme court. this is just over a half an hour. >> good morning, ladies and gentlemen. i am dean witter, vice president at the federalist society. for our first address today, we welcome a man who's no stranger stranger to hard work. raised in a modest household he learned the value of money, good hard work and traditional values. these have dedicated his pursuit. before attending university of missouri kansas city companies are honorably in the u.s. navy. after earning his jd from smu he worked in dallas' largest law firms -- lesson in health care matt
>> not under current law. that's what we need to change it. >> welcome the team that both very much for your time. [applause] >> i am margaret carlton and i approve the panel. >> now, florida governor rick scott talks about governing in florida and its focus on job creation and expanding access to health care. he said the annual lawyers convention in washington d.c. hosted by the federalist society. this year's topic is the future of constitutional law and the supreme...
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May 14, 2012
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everything is in the four corners of the law. the legal counsel all the time, everything has to be done and exactly the right way. if you start deviating from with all requires, just based on your own perspective for references or ideologies you can get in a lot of trouble. it's not with the white house is supposed to do some people expected the president to do things the would literally not even be allowed by law and were not willing often to do the hard work of continuing to build the public welfare and a congress to work with. >> host: do you feel like -- and you were critical of democrats for falling down on the job over the years -- why isn't obama part of that, and second, why isn't he part of the political elite that has failed to help the middle class and held everyone but the 1%? >> guest: i criticize obama. people ask about the book, is it pro obama, is it antiobama? it is a pro analysis book. i really felt like a lot of the books are being written about the obama here and are being written about this moment in history
everything is in the four corners of the law. the legal counsel all the time, everything has to be done and exactly the right way. if you start deviating from with all requires, just based on your own perspective for references or ideologies you can get in a lot of trouble. it's not with the white house is supposed to do some people expected the president to do things the would literally not even be allowed by law and were not willing often to do the hard work of continuing to build the public...
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Oct 23, 2012
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had all the states that it implemented these types of laws, had all those laws been in effect today, more than a million latinos would have been directly affected by these proposals. our analysis in the report they are releasing today shows that in the states where these laws are in effect, because they have either been pre-cleared by the department of justice or have been upheld and the courts, where they have been challenged, possibly 219,000 latino voters will be directly affected this november. an additional 835,000 latinos could have been affected had these laws been pre-cleared by the department of justice or not upheld by the federal courts. many of these laws are still in debate. some of them are being appealed by the state such as in texas. some of them will be given to be scrutinized in some of them may yet come into effect so these 800,000 latinos who are not directly affected in november may yet be subjected to the impact of these laws moving forward. the chart here shows which states have the laws in effect in 2012 and the types of measures in each of the states and also
had all the states that it implemented these types of laws, had all those laws been in effect today, more than a million latinos would have been directly affected by these proposals. our analysis in the report they are releasing today shows that in the states where these laws are in effect, because they have either been pre-cleared by the department of justice or have been upheld and the courts, where they have been challenged, possibly 219,000 latino voters will be directly affected this...
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Mar 13, 2012
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they're obviously are laws on the rocks. part of the approach of the mccain bill is to update the computer laws to keep them up to speed the nature of the internet and talking penalties. >> brendan sasso is with the hill and covers cybersecurity and other technological issues and now here is our interview with senator lieberman and collins. >> we are joined this week by the communicators by the chairman of the senate homeland security committee senator joe lieberman and connecticut and the republican on the committee susan collins, a republican in maine. senator lieberman if i could start with you what is the goal of the cybersecurity legislation you have introduced? >> well, the goal simply stated is to protect all that we americans in cyberspace from being stolen and from being attacked and the that that is going on many people are not aware of as they say people from outside of the country actually going into the internet systems and computer systems and companies and stealing industrial intellectual property and then tak
they're obviously are laws on the rocks. part of the approach of the mccain bill is to update the computer laws to keep them up to speed the nature of the internet and talking penalties. >> brendan sasso is with the hill and covers cybersecurity and other technological issues and now here is our interview with senator lieberman and collins. >> we are joined this week by the communicators by the chairman of the senate homeland security committee senator joe lieberman and connecticut...
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Sep 26, 2012
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do you believe in enforcing these laws? the whole idea of the dream that as well, these are the good kids. the thing is many will say and i think they're right, it doesn't mean you're a bad kid if you're not in community college or maybe you got in trouble and you have a criminal record. doesn't make you a bad person. there's something very disingenuous about the debate around this. but that's because advocates want to structure the debate in a certain way. i don't how much of this is rooted in the police that are kind of prior to the way we actually structure the conversation. i think i begin to structure the conversation advantageously, which is their job. >> thank you. just a couple more questions and then we have to cut it off. maybe back there and also to your right. >> hi, kerry walker. was wondering if you could all address the millennial scum especially looking forward in terms of democratic party strengths. >> also the gentleman over there. they'll be up for question. >> thanks for the forum today, to the panelists
do you believe in enforcing these laws? the whole idea of the dream that as well, these are the good kids. the thing is many will say and i think they're right, it doesn't mean you're a bad kid if you're not in community college or maybe you got in trouble and you have a criminal record. doesn't make you a bad person. there's something very disingenuous about the debate around this. but that's because advocates want to structure the debate in a certain way. i don't how much of this is rooted in...
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Oct 25, 2012
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the same law would just seem to apply, but, add david said, there's another line of case law that presents significant problems for that argument. the court has stated or held three times that dog sniffs are not searches. as david said in the early 1980s in u.s. versus place, the court addressed the case of a traveler in an airport who was detained so that his luggage could be sniffed by a drug detection dog. the court actually struck that down saying that detention was not proper, but it said it was not proper because the person was held for too long. the court could have stopped there, but it went on to say that the sniff by the drug dog wasn't an independent constitutional violation because justice o'connor wrote the opinion because the majority said dog sniffs are jeep rows -- generous. all they do is sniff contraband or the absence of contraband, and therefore, it's not a search. this was not based on arguments by the parties. it was really almost gratuitous not citing empirical evidence for the proposition that dogs only discover contraband or the absence of it. it was a bit of a thr
the same law would just seem to apply, but, add david said, there's another line of case law that presents significant problems for that argument. the court has stated or held three times that dog sniffs are not searches. as david said in the early 1980s in u.s. versus place, the court addressed the case of a traveler in an airport who was detained so that his luggage could be sniffed by a drug detection dog. the court actually struck that down saying that detention was not proper, but it said...
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Oct 16, 2012
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that is in the law itself. there are questions about whether the secretary of education can come of with his own set of conditions with no basis in the law whatsoever and require them to use problems in no child left behind and failure of the administration to get a reauthorization to bring states into agreeing to these conditions because they need flexibility and waivers will be reviewed with particular attention to whether those conditions make sense. >> you think that is fair critique of the waivers? >> it is clear there is full authority in the context of the law to respond to statements that want desperately to get targeted, smart relief from the excess prescriptive ness of the way no child left behind is implemented. the fact that 40 states have come forward eagerly with waiver requests, asking for this relief, to me shows this is not something being imposed by some exercise of discretion for the tool that most states support for superintendents and governors. is a long-term fix? no. the real job needs to
that is in the law itself. there are questions about whether the secretary of education can come of with his own set of conditions with no basis in the law whatsoever and require them to use problems in no child left behind and failure of the administration to get a reauthorization to bring states into agreeing to these conditions because they need flexibility and waivers will be reviewed with particular attention to whether those conditions make sense. >> you think that is fair critique...
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May 13, 2012
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that was she was the head of state, he signed the law but for any lillehammer dr. king, those grassroots leaders were the ones in mississippi and the ones pushing forward to give the president something to respond to come in and i think that after the inauguration, not everybody that too many of us sat down and thought that we had passed the finish line when the was the starting line, november, 2008. >> host: the environment is a place for criticism what is your take on what happened at the keystone pipeline. it's a really bad idea. they would take the dirtiest most awful scraping bottom of the bucket nasty polycarp in down america's heartland over farmland or aqua first and the gulf coast so that it could be refined and shipped to china. we wouldn't get any of the oil but more importantly because the kind of toxic stuff is is very corrosive. to be risking americans and the health and safety of american people to do it, to benefit the foreign corporation selling oil to china the numbers were it shows once again people's movements can make a difference. those people
that was she was the head of state, he signed the law but for any lillehammer dr. king, those grassroots leaders were the ones in mississippi and the ones pushing forward to give the president something to respond to come in and i think that after the inauguration, not everybody that too many of us sat down and thought that we had passed the finish line when the was the starting line, november, 2008. >> host: the environment is a place for criticism what is your take on what happened at...
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Dec 28, 2012
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what is that perspective now that the affordable care act will begin to become fully finalized to law over the next couple of years. we keep hearing those on the conservative side or republicans raise concerns about what we'll do for the country. what is your view. now you're not part profit excess. you can speak more freely. is it going to be a good thing for the country? >> yes, it will. for one reason, as an example, right now we have 50 some billion dollars a year of uncompensated care. that means people don't have insurance don't have medicaid, medicare or private insurance, don't have military coverage or anything like that, so they are not insured. they have access to health care in the emergency rooms. if they taken in and can't pay and don't go through a bankruptcy or something like that, that costs that care doesn't just go away. it's shifted over to the rest of the us who have insurance. that's $50 billion. now, you stop and think about that it could be as much as $1500 per person who pay for those who don't. when you have everybody in the system, all insured one way or ano
what is that perspective now that the affordable care act will begin to become fully finalized to law over the next couple of years. we keep hearing those on the conservative side or republicans raise concerns about what we'll do for the country. what is your view. now you're not part profit excess. you can speak more freely. is it going to be a good thing for the country? >> yes, it will. for one reason, as an example, right now we have 50 some billion dollars a year of uncompensated...
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Apr 15, 2012
04/12
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take me through the law enforcement aspects of the warm. you guys feel that you have conclusive sensitive to the authors were or are. >> my suspicion is commend i can say with any certainty, that the authorities do know who was behind it. i suspect that the difficulty in apprehending them has more to do with diplomacy, dealing with a foreign government, dealing with foreign laws and police agencies that it does with actually finding them. we do know that they are tremendously sophisticated programmers. the reason i use the word pro is that it is almost certainly not one person. the worm conficker to mr. is such a high level of proficiency in so many different areas, is literally impossible to manage -- imagine that one person would have that level of ability in that level of knowledge in so many different areas. so the likely culprit is a group while funded, probably by organized crime who set out to create a very large, very stable spot at which could be used as a platform for all manner of mischief, money-making by far. if he looked at th
take me through the law enforcement aspects of the warm. you guys feel that you have conclusive sensitive to the authors were or are. >> my suspicion is commend i can say with any certainty, that the authorities do know who was behind it. i suspect that the difficulty in apprehending them has more to do with diplomacy, dealing with a foreign government, dealing with foreign laws and police agencies that it does with actually finding them. we do know that they are tremendously...
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Mar 20, 2012
03/12
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it was signed into law by the president. it is now the law of the land. it established the key components of the budget for both 2012 and 2013. here is the language from the budget control act itself. it is a very clear the budget control act is intended to serve as the budget for 2012 and 2013. it states, for the purpose of enforcing a congressional budget act of 1974 through april 15th 2012, the allegations aggregates and levels set in subsection b1 show -- shall apply in the senate in the same manner as for a concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2012. that same language is repeated for 2013. in many ways the budget control act was even more extensive than a traditional budget resolution. number one, it has the force of law, unlike a budget resolution that never goes to the president , which all of you know, a budget resolution is purely a congressional document. the budget control act is a law. number two, said discretionary caps for ten years instead of the one year normally set in a budget resolution. number three, if provides importan
it was signed into law by the president. it is now the law of the land. it established the key components of the budget for both 2012 and 2013. here is the language from the budget control act itself. it is a very clear the budget control act is intended to serve as the budget for 2012 and 2013. it states, for the purpose of enforcing a congressional budget act of 1974 through april 15th 2012, the allegations aggregates and levels set in subsection b1 show -- shall apply in the senate in the...
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Sep 24, 2012
09/12
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michigan law school. someone that is a very influential and very connected and very powerful and is able to do beneficial things come so they become free grateful, yet becomes a third member of the family. hillary clinton as another strong woman. and that i find really interesting to rely can't wait to read her memoirs. >> host: of the generational change. >> guest: here is someone that has been a rival in the 2008 campaign and this is one of the most harsh nomination fights in the history. she is given a seat at the table, she's offered to be the secretary of state as the party unity very few of the supporters and senior staff were brought in a sad fenestration and they're going to put her on an island they are not intending to visit. they are not going to be sending postcards. she asked on one condition, she will take the job under one condition. she wants a weekly standing meeting with the president and she gets it but i that the first two meetings were pretty awkward. the usually occurred on fears the
michigan law school. someone that is a very influential and very connected and very powerful and is able to do beneficial things come so they become free grateful, yet becomes a third member of the family. hillary clinton as another strong woman. and that i find really interesting to rely can't wait to read her memoirs. >> host: of the generational change. >> guest: here is someone that has been a rival in the 2008 campaign and this is one of the most harsh nomination fights in the...
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Oct 3, 2012
10/12
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in part because the laws our policy. we spent an awful lot of time, effort and money after world war ii creating an international system, economic system in particular to stimulate the growth in the rest of the world. so, this is the success of the policy of several decades that has made us relatively less strong in terms of disposable cash and disposable incentives to get to the behavior that we want to see. militarily, we surely are as strong as we have ever been, but we live in a world that has a number of nuclear powers and we still live in the world before 1957 that had not. so, other than us. you know, to me it hardly even seems worth debating this is a different world. >> i was told we have to debate. [inaudible] the decline is the wrong word. i think the world is getting more crowded. they are growing faster and in economic terms the u.s. will have the west shared wealth for the years ahead but there isn't a country by the way that is as jessica said that is a story of american success. it's for 60 years of promo
in part because the laws our policy. we spent an awful lot of time, effort and money after world war ii creating an international system, economic system in particular to stimulate the growth in the rest of the world. so, this is the success of the policy of several decades that has made us relatively less strong in terms of disposable cash and disposable incentives to get to the behavior that we want to see. militarily, we surely are as strong as we have ever been, but we live in a world that...
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Mar 10, 2012
03/12
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he was the attorney general in arizona and then was -- [inaudible conversations] >> big law and order guy, loves you. past president of the nra. we can't wait to read your book. [inaudible conversations] >> thank you for all your work for this country. we need people like you in congress. [laughter] >> nice to have a fan. i needed them. >> oh, no, no, no. thank you. >> it's great to see you. >> thank you. >> sure. well, you'd like to get out of here, wouldn't you? are you having a little -- who bought it? i'm telling you -- [inaudible conversations] >> well, we, we ran the same year. >> yeah. >> let's get it going. >> maybe stump the book. >> i don't get anything. [applause] >> good evening, everyone. i didn't hear you. hi, everyone, i'm tammy, and be i'm thrilled to welcome you to this special evening for a very dear friend of all of ours, and we're or here at this fabulous hotel, the jefferson, and i'd like to introduce you to peter grossman who's one of our co-hosts. connie mill steven is not here tonight. peter, will you come and say hello? [applause] >> thank you. just very brief
he was the attorney general in arizona and then was -- [inaudible conversations] >> big law and order guy, loves you. past president of the nra. we can't wait to read your book. [inaudible conversations] >> thank you for all your work for this country. we need people like you in congress. [laughter] >> nice to have a fan. i needed them. >> oh, no, no, no. thank you. >> it's great to see you. >> thank you. >> sure. well, you'd like to get out of here,...
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Oct 4, 2012
10/12
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eye 120
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the country only has several thousand but each year china's law school, and students. [laughter] >> closure like the media dynamic and interest group policies and interest groups. none of them existed in 1989 in thailand. these provide a stabilizing force for peace and a party needs to transform itself before too late. there is a serious discussion in social groups talking about the legitimacy of chinese economic policy. how this happened. how it could be possible. nine members or even higher. the position would never stop. that is very important critical moment china experienced in that conjunction of history. in a way the answer of your question is does leadership and confidence in many ways they also stand at the ability domestically but it is unclear whether they will really transform the party because it is a very complicated process. you need to change the verdict and deal with ethnic issues and you should also again all these kinds of issues and china's economy we haven't talked about, slow down. this is a result of the political bob black but on further review
the country only has several thousand but each year china's law school, and students. [laughter] >> closure like the media dynamic and interest group policies and interest groups. none of them existed in 1989 in thailand. these provide a stabilizing force for peace and a party needs to transform itself before too late. there is a serious discussion in social groups talking about the legitimacy of chinese economic policy. how this happened. how it could be possible. nine members or even...
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Mar 25, 2012
03/12
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>> the university of michigan. >> that is where went to law school. it's beautiful up there. >> it is for my mom. >> we are going to take pictures quickly again. ian, i know, i know. do you know what? i'm going to walk through that line. that's the only way to do that. is that okay? asked me to hold the book up. do you know what? okay. i am going to walk through the line, hold the book open to the page. take my picture but no posing. >> it's upside down, sorry. >> thank you. >> you are going to have to explain everyone why my handwriting is so messy. where are you at school? the north carolina. [inaudible conversations] >> thank you so much. >> thank you. where you from? >> i am from mexico. >> nice to meet you. >> thank you so much. >> i will try to come back later today. >> thank you. >> good work. you are a great american. thank you. >> how's it going? >> fine, thanks. how are you? [laughter] >> no, going teed tv. that is why we have to leave. that is a great picture. do you want this to anyone? >> thank you so much. >> thank you so much. >> thank
>> the university of michigan. >> that is where went to law school. it's beautiful up there. >> it is for my mom. >> we are going to take pictures quickly again. ian, i know, i know. do you know what? i'm going to walk through that line. that's the only way to do that. is that okay? asked me to hold the book up. do you know what? okay. i am going to walk through the line, hold the book open to the page. take my picture but no posing. >> it's upside down, sorry....
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Jul 24, 2012
07/12
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it was a law. anybody that's had even a little bit of civics knows that a law is stronger than a resolution, and indeed that law cut spending by $900 billion over ten years and put in place this sequester that we now face to cut another $1.2 trillion over ten years for a total spending cut of over $2 trillion, the biggest spending cut in the history of the united states, and the republican leader acts as though he never heard of it. it never happened. now, let's get real. we took objection action in the house and the senate, and it was signed into law by the president. mr. president, the last time our friends on the other side were in charge, their policies brought us to the brink of financial collapse. have we forgotten the economy was shrinking at a rate of 9% in the last quarter of the previous administration? and in their last month in office, we lost 800,000 jobs in one month. that was their record. this administration has turned things around. we're no longer losing jobs, we're gaining them.
it was a law. anybody that's had even a little bit of civics knows that a law is stronger than a resolution, and indeed that law cut spending by $900 billion over ten years and put in place this sequester that we now face to cut another $1.2 trillion over ten years for a total spending cut of over $2 trillion, the biggest spending cut in the history of the united states, and the republican leader acts as though he never heard of it. it never happened. now, let's get real. we took objection...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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and order they have been demagogue when nixon says law-and-order we know what he talks about. those were reagan and bush and rudy guiliani bless his soul tens of thousands of black lives were saved when will fare was one of the reform to blacks of lives were saved in a different way law-and-order was so saved and bill clinton took credit for both. [laughter] and we have 12 years of paradise where i describe the many wonderful things that happened. people are not walking on eggshells is a more. people had to be worried you would innocently say a word then you would ruin your career, you'd be hated by all of humankind. that was after over at o.j.. changes are subtle but it was wonderful for race relations in america. and happened along time ago then comes the most liberal candidate as barack obama it is the two for. a liberal president and his critics by:the reese's. and now with the bombing it comes back. we're walking on eight shells. although not very delicately [laughter] hence my introduction of. [laughter] i am going to a debate party tonight called a racist pizza debate p
and order they have been demagogue when nixon says law-and-order we know what he talks about. those were reagan and bush and rudy guiliani bless his soul tens of thousands of black lives were saved when will fare was one of the reform to blacks of lives were saved in a different way law-and-order was so saved and bill clinton took credit for both. [laughter] and we have 12 years of paradise where i describe the many wonderful things that happened. people are not walking on eggshells is a more....
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Sep 30, 2012
09/12
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she went to stanford law school. very connected very influential, very powerful. and she has done enormously beneficial things for them. they have become very grateful. she has essentially become a third member of the family. hillary is another strong woman. that i find really interesting. i can't wait until she writes a book about it. here is someone who is arrival to obama in the 2008 campaign, and this is one of the most decisive, harsh, nomination crises in democratic history. she has been given a seat at the table. and the bid for party unity. they are going to put her on an island that they are not intending to visit. she hasn't just been voted voted off voted off the island, they're not going to be sending postcards. she has one condition. she will take the job under one condition. she wants a weekly standing meeting with the president, and she gets it. i bet those first few meetings were pretty awkward. they usually occur on thursday mornings. but in the course of those meetings, she wins and loses over the president through her hard work and her intellige
she went to stanford law school. very connected very influential, very powerful. and she has done enormously beneficial things for them. they have become very grateful. she has essentially become a third member of the family. hillary is another strong woman. that i find really interesting. i can't wait until she writes a book about it. here is someone who is arrival to obama in the 2008 campaign, and this is one of the most decisive, harsh, nomination crises in democratic history. she has been...
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Jan 28, 2012
01/12
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eye 154
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and it's also, by the way, codified in the law. we have a dodd-frank reform bill on finance that you may be familiar with, a lot of debate about that. one of the clauses in there was a whistleblower clause which says if you work for the private sector or the federal government and you know of somebody committing a financial crime who is your boss -- insider trading, embezzlement, you know, taking bribes, whatever finish if you report them to a law enforcement agency, your job is protected. you have whistleblower protection. congress is exempt from that lieu. [laughter] so there's no whistleblower protection. if you see your boss on capitol hill doing something and you report it, great for you reporting it, you may very well, and i bet you probably will lose your job. these are the sorts of exemptions that they are allowed. i am a firm believer in transparency. i don't thinkoff to, um, do things in terms of make things complex. i don't think that having them police themselves makes sense. because it hasn't been very effective. i thi
and it's also, by the way, codified in the law. we have a dodd-frank reform bill on finance that you may be familiar with, a lot of debate about that. one of the clauses in there was a whistleblower clause which says if you work for the private sector or the federal government and you know of somebody committing a financial crime who is your boss -- insider trading, embezzlement, you know, taking bribes, whatever finish if you report them to a law enforcement agency, your job is protected. you...
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Apr 20, 2012
04/12
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eye 114
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part of the tax gap is a result of tax cheaters who simply refuse to comply with the law. which increases burden on the rest of us, but it could be due to unintentional errors as well. i'm sure we can all agree that the tax code is extremely complex. this complexity makes it hard for taxpayers who honestly want to pay their taxes to figure out what they actually ill. as a result, they can accidentally overpaid or underpaid. we must do more to understand the sources of the tax gap and comply function comprise solutions so we can make progress by making solutions. we cannot close the tax gap by enforcement against the average american who did their best to comply with the laws. we also must work to reform our tax code in a way that will help us collect more of the taxes. more taxes that are older, but not pay. and let us continue our work to make the tax code more fair and simple. in order to do that, we must work together. i think our witnesses today, inspector general miller, mr. white, ms. olson, for your appearance here today. mr. george, i think all of you for being her
part of the tax gap is a result of tax cheaters who simply refuse to comply with the law. which increases burden on the rest of us, but it could be due to unintentional errors as well. i'm sure we can all agree that the tax code is extremely complex. this complexity makes it hard for taxpayers who honestly want to pay their taxes to figure out what they actually ill. as a result, they can accidentally overpaid or underpaid. we must do more to understand the sources of the tax gap and comply...
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80
Sep 26, 2012
09/12
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eye 80
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lamontagne: the law of the land and as the governor i will be duty bound to enforce the law of the land, and i will. hassan: come to your desk to ban abortion. lamontagne: the law of the land provides. >> moderator: when you come on my program, the exchange, later on i'm sure we will talk about that. thank you very much for that. i want to turn now to our final segment where we return to our panelists for a few final questions. now, for this segment you will have two minutes to answer. if there is a follow-up call one benefit that. first, we are going to turn to fill with a question. >> does the exeter hospital have a need for additional state regulation and oversight? lamontagne: its is the need for a national database that enables the states in our country to know when an itinerant worker, a fellow who was working in a number of states, we know what the true background is of this person before they're hired locally. that is really where i think the failure came. now, i don't know the extent to which the response was added delayed or denied and who knew what went, but i do know that it
lamontagne: the law of the land and as the governor i will be duty bound to enforce the law of the land, and i will. hassan: come to your desk to ban abortion. lamontagne: the law of the land provides. >> moderator: when you come on my program, the exchange, later on i'm sure we will talk about that. thank you very much for that. i want to turn now to our final segment where we return to our panelists for a few final questions. now, for this segment you will have two minutes to answer. if...
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136
Mar 11, 2012
03/12
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wyatt earp who had one short-lived marriage when his young wife died tragically and two more common law marriages before he hooked up with josephine, we know wyatt did not have much of a relationship, and josephine jumped around from man to man, and yet they spent decades and decades together, with each other through thick and thin. and i can only assume from everything, and i think it's true, that whatever else you can say about the two of them, they ended up general -- genuinely loving each other. and in any of our lives, isn't that what we can hope for most, to spend most of them with someone we love and who loves us back? so good for both of them. at least that ended well. not much else in wyatt's life did. >> there's another great hero in the alamo story in young william barrett travis. the alamo, unlike bowie and crockett, the alamo is his sole claim to fame but has made him a powerful figure in western history and, certainly, in texas. and he's kind of the brooding, romantic hero, although very much a sort of man's man on the frontier. but i think because he was so adept with the
wyatt earp who had one short-lived marriage when his young wife died tragically and two more common law marriages before he hooked up with josephine, we know wyatt did not have much of a relationship, and josephine jumped around from man to man, and yet they spent decades and decades together, with each other through thick and thin. and i can only assume from everything, and i think it's true, that whatever else you can say about the two of them, they ended up general -- genuinely loving each...
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124
Feb 4, 2012
02/12
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congress is exempt from the law. so there is no whistle blower protection. if you see your boss on capitol hill doing something in the report it, great for your reporting it. he may very well, and i bet you probably will lose your job. these are the sorts of exemptions they are allowed. i am a firm believer in transparency. i don't think you have to do things in terms of making things complex. i don't think that having the police themselves makes sense because it does not been very effective. i think the greater the transparency the better, so one of the things i talk about in the book, i would have to be done in sores some -- some sort of modified pera, congress is exempt from the freedom of reformation act. so literally your chance of getting access to the cia documents is much higher than it is to any sort of congressional private correspondence or phone records are meeting records because you can apply to the cia, and in my tonight for 20 years, but you will eventually get access to top-secret documents. congress is exempt. i think congress should not be
congress is exempt from the law. so there is no whistle blower protection. if you see your boss on capitol hill doing something in the report it, great for your reporting it. he may very well, and i bet you probably will lose your job. these are the sorts of exemptions they are allowed. i am a firm believer in transparency. i don't think you have to do things in terms of making things complex. i don't think that having the police themselves makes sense because it does not been very effective. i...
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166
Jan 26, 2012
01/12
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part of the law is bad lob. one of the things that happens in this is we fail to get the white house leadership necessary for bipartisan bills. i worked for the mccain campaign. i say this not as a criticism of the president himself but an observation about the way our system works. only the white house is in a position to go to his party and say you know we will campaign in your district. whatever it may be, they can do that. only the white house can go to the other side and say we understand this is a party and we don't sign. that is our pledge. they they'd they are the only ones that have those leverages. we saw the supercommittee struggle last fall. it was a sincere effort. i work closely with both sides and they worked hard. they tried hard to get a deal. they failed miserably because the congress alone can't surmount the hurdles necessary to get to the finish line. only the white house can bring it there and we now have failed during the decade when it was crucial to fix the entitlement programs and fix th
part of the law is bad lob. one of the things that happens in this is we fail to get the white house leadership necessary for bipartisan bills. i worked for the mccain campaign. i say this not as a criticism of the president himself but an observation about the way our system works. only the white house is in a position to go to his party and say you know we will campaign in your district. whatever it may be, they can do that. only the white house can go to the other side and say we understand...
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122
Nov 16, 2012
11/12
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eye 122
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, not just creating laws upon laws and layers upon layers. the >> i'm told by the stafford got time for one more quick one and i'll let that be you. [inaudible] [inaudible] >> it has been more than a year at this point. can any action be taken -- [inaudible] >> well, you think what you can realize is that there is a lot of documents that have been generated from this transaction and tried to limit everybody knew has been a difficult process for us. i'm told there's a number of investigations still under way. cftc, estes be my guess is fairly shortly we will begin to hear from that. there was a lot of transactions. this is a complex company, have a lot of different affiliates, a lot of operations as a global company. i think what everybody wants to make sure a visit they move forward with an action that they have come up with the proof in the documentation they need to do that. i thank everybody for coming today. again, i appreciate your interest in this. some of the committee staff that worked so hard in this report will be around if you have
, not just creating laws upon laws and layers upon layers. the >> i'm told by the stafford got time for one more quick one and i'll let that be you. [inaudible] [inaudible] >> it has been more than a year at this point. can any action be taken -- [inaudible] >> well, you think what you can realize is that there is a lot of documents that have been generated from this transaction and tried to limit everybody knew has been a difficult process for us. i'm told there's a number of...
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Mar 18, 2012
03/12
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system and humanitarian assistance and international law. it is very concerning. they do not get the nuances. >> the question is about jargon? even mechanics have jargon. there is a marine jargon you look at me like i had nine heads. to an extent even the academics have jargon but it is a healthy thing. my broker help demonstrates this it is healthy for those intellectuals to ring gauge with the world. you have a difficult time if all of your communications is laced with jargon. 15 years ago of professor pohl top-ranked from the year can never city. the post modernity constructionist journal was contained the academic articles that did not make sense to him. he decided to ride a parity of the articles to make every disclaims regarding physics and social sciences like how fat to contributed to mathematicians. he sent it on a lark and it was published. it says something about academia that something like that would be published. it should have been a reality check. the professors should have gotten mad at themselves but unfortunately they got mad at the guy pulling
system and humanitarian assistance and international law. it is very concerning. they do not get the nuances. >> the question is about jargon? even mechanics have jargon. there is a marine jargon you look at me like i had nine heads. to an extent even the academics have jargon but it is a healthy thing. my broker help demonstrates this it is healthy for those intellectuals to ring gauge with the world. you have a difficult time if all of your communications is laced with jargon. 15 years...
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59
Aug 21, 2012
08/12
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what this would do is change current law including current constitutional law which permits enemy combatants who are captured on the battlefield to be held indefinitely without the right of habeas corpus. the supreme court upheld that concept; and it doesn't matter whether the enemy combatant is a u.s. citizen or not. if they fight for a foreign country or foreign interest, they can be so held, and, of course; during world war ii, there were literally thousands of both german, io it -- italian, and japanese ennies held in camps in the united states, and they were dealed with by the military authorities, were not subject to the right of habeas corpus, and that included several german soldiers who were captured after they were released -- after they got into the united states by a submarine on the east coast, seen they were captured in the united states, and they were an enemy combatant, they were subject to military authorities and indefinite detention. i support the idea that that constitutional law that is currently existent be continued, and i oppose treats enemy combatants as if they are
what this would do is change current law including current constitutional law which permits enemy combatants who are captured on the battlefield to be held indefinitely without the right of habeas corpus. the supreme court upheld that concept; and it doesn't matter whether the enemy combatant is a u.s. citizen or not. if they fight for a foreign country or foreign interest, they can be so held, and, of course; during world war ii, there were literally thousands of both german, io it -- italian,...
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121
Nov 8, 2012
11/12
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obama cannot believe i am able to go to school, which i started in january with the potential to go to law school. and i think that romney lost a lot of people because about 47% vote. >> i am really upset. i can't believe that we, again, not mr. obama into the white house. i am a nurse, and it has been important that patients are being, you know, they are not being seen and so forth. due to a lot of medicare cuts. you see it and you see these ladies and it came with the wrong card. you know? >> i think it is a very dark day. i am shocked and dismayed how this man could have one again. i really feel that the election, so many people are out of work. people in this community have lost their job. you have found a job. there are no jobs. the woman who called before, the situation with obama with our troops and with our embassy, i think he handled it in properly. and i wouldn't be surprised before he gets ready to give his inaugural speech that there might not be an impeachment trial that starts. i think that the country is more divided than ever before and i think he was able to win because so
obama cannot believe i am able to go to school, which i started in january with the potential to go to law school. and i think that romney lost a lot of people because about 47% vote. >> i am really upset. i can't believe that we, again, not mr. obama into the white house. i am a nurse, and it has been important that patients are being, you know, they are not being seen and so forth. due to a lot of medicare cuts. you see it and you see these ladies and it came with the wrong card. you...
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Apr 14, 2012
04/12
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the law doesn't require disclosure. that sort of paints the picture as to how a gun shot -- how gun shy people are about crossing the party line and putting their political careers on the line. you have seen the e emergence of the tea party. you have seen what has happened in the town meetings. right here in convention hall, early august of 2009 secretary of health and human services kathleen sins delius --sebelius came to talk about the affordable health care plan which was before the supreme court and the tea party was out in force. had we been in this room having this discussion we wouldn't have been able to hear one another talk there was so much noise in the adjoining room. a few days later i started my town meetings. every year in august when i was in the senate i would make it a point to visit every county and usually in lebanon i threw a to 90 people. on this day, 1200. in a relatively famous town meeting where they had the replay again and again of the rambunctious crowd highlighted by one fellow who charged up
the law doesn't require disclosure. that sort of paints the picture as to how a gun shot -- how gun shy people are about crossing the party line and putting their political careers on the line. you have seen the e emergence of the tea party. you have seen what has happened in the town meetings. right here in convention hall, early august of 2009 secretary of health and human services kathleen sins delius --sebelius came to talk about the affordable health care plan which was before the supreme...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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my law firm brought the case gebs the -- against the university of michigan and law school. we brought that original case ten years ago, won against the law school, lost against undergrads because of sandra day o'connor who says we need 25 more years of affirmative action. now we have constitutional provisions with expiration dates. [laughter] there's -- there's -- an interesting book called "mismatched" by two liberals making the argument with empirical evidence that affirmative action is harmful to black people. what a surprise. liberals try to help, ruin black people's lives. that's the story of the book. their argument is by if it's a little bit of affirmative action, not bad, but elevating people to schools they are not ready for and where everyone else has higher scores, they get discouraged, depressed, feel stupid, drop out, easy subjects. one way liberals brushed the sad results of affirmative action under the rug is all the black studies courses which just pushes them off into a ghetto. how do they cover the failure of the public schools? affirmative action. i have
my law firm brought the case gebs the -- against the university of michigan and law school. we brought that original case ten years ago, won against the law school, lost against undergrads because of sandra day o'connor who says we need 25 more years of affirmative action. now we have constitutional provisions with expiration dates. [laughter] there's -- there's -- an interesting book called "mismatched" by two liberals making the argument with empirical evidence that affirmative...
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Oct 20, 2012
10/12
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thoughts on the hundred dollars stimulus bill, the american recovery and reinvestment act, financial law by president obama and submit -- february 17th, 2009. this is about 50 minutes. [applause] >> thanks, all of you for braving the rain. i am thrilled to start by tour in new york. my wonderful parents are here. the only new yorkers who go to florida to visit their grandchildren. there are a lot of facts and figures and fun characters and colorful stories in this book. i knew it was going to be controversial. it is a revisionist history of the obama stimulus and just about everybody hates the obama stimulus. sometimes it feels like obama hates it too. he won't say the word stimulus any more. kind of hard to blame him. a year after it passed the percentage of americans who believe the stimulus created jobs was lower than the percentage of americans who believed elvis was a live. at one point i tell a story how obama told his cabinet that the stimulus was the only thing less popular than he was. in any case when you put the words change and obama this close together you are going to get y
thoughts on the hundred dollars stimulus bill, the american recovery and reinvestment act, financial law by president obama and submit -- february 17th, 2009. this is about 50 minutes. [applause] >> thanks, all of you for braving the rain. i am thrilled to start by tour in new york. my wonderful parents are here. the only new yorkers who go to florida to visit their grandchildren. there are a lot of facts and figures and fun characters and colorful stories in this book. i knew it was...
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Oct 21, 2012
10/12
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low low toilets actually signed into law by a president h. w. bush, bush 41 which requires -- now the impact of that is that sludge will back up in the city sewers and the mission bay neighborhood quoted that, smelled like rotten eggs. they are using $14 million of taxpayer money to dump bleach into the sewer to clean up the problem that previously simply did not exist. bleach it is also an unfriendly chemical. all right, so who can you trust in science? well i think scientist, medical doctors and yes even governmental regulatory bodies like the epa are usually right. where i will nitpick with government regulators, sometimes think they tend to be a little too cautious. for instance we have gotten approval on e-cigarettes in e. cigarette should be healthier than regular cigarettes. on real clear -- not on realclearscience we try to link to the best science news, the best science analysis and that is what we do. we try to put aside the partisan bickering and focus on what is good science and good science policy. read the abstract. those are good
low low toilets actually signed into law by a president h. w. bush, bush 41 which requires -- now the impact of that is that sludge will back up in the city sewers and the mission bay neighborhood quoted that, smelled like rotten eggs. they are using $14 million of taxpayer money to dump bleach into the sewer to clean up the problem that previously simply did not exist. bleach it is also an unfriendly chemical. all right, so who can you trust in science? well i think scientist, medical doctors...
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Mar 10, 2012
03/12
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"race, crime and the law," "the n-word," "interracial intimacies," "sellout" and "the persistence of the color line" is his thinkest book. and another new book coming out on affirmative action in early 2013. professor kennedy, thank you for being on "in depth." booktv continues on c-span2. .. >> good morning. thank you. thank you for -- the screening last night. 969 this morning. the motion picture association of america partnering with politico. and maggie abramson and i will be taking questions from you. also on twitter please join the conversation. "game change" the best selling books into the a movie. let's get started. mark halperin has a couple of guests. >> [applause] >> peter, you can introduce your guest. >> average of new york. >> we are going to start with cliff heilemann. >> did you ask about national-security? foreign policy or domestic policy? what did you ask her? >> they conflicted with her and she was prepared for her life to change. there were no policy questions. >> you guys didn't grill her because he wanted him to win. >> the real steve schmidt here. did that hap
"race, crime and the law," "the n-word," "interracial intimacies," "sellout" and "the persistence of the color line" is his thinkest book. and another new book coming out on affirmative action in early 2013. professor kennedy, thank you for being on "in depth." booktv continues on c-span2. .. >> good morning. thank you. thank you for -- the screening last night. 969 this morning. the motion picture association of america...
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Jan 23, 2012
01/12
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party loyalties and interests are sometimes more binding than law. extend his effective control into the branches of government other than his own. and he often may win as a political leader what he cannot command under the constitution." end of quote. and so jackson concluded it this way, something we ought to take to heart -- "only congress itself can prevent powers from slipping through its fingers." that's the end of the quote. mr. president, outside these walls in the reception room are portraits of great presidents -- or great senators of the past, in the room right out here. the original portraits were selected by a committee that was headed by senator john f. kennedy. they include webster, clay, calhoun, lafayette and taft. now, these senators were partisans but they were selected because of the role they played in maintaining the unique institution that is our senate -- meaning the people's senate -- in our constitutional system. in particular, they protected the senate and the country from the excessive claims of presidential power that wer
party loyalties and interests are sometimes more binding than law. extend his effective control into the branches of government other than his own. and he often may win as a political leader what he cannot command under the constitution." end of quote. and so jackson concluded it this way, something we ought to take to heart -- "only congress itself can prevent powers from slipping through its fingers." that's the end of the quote. mr. president, outside these walls in the...
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Nov 8, 2012
11/12
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in many ways we are on the frontier of this law. the law is old but when you try to apply it to cyber weapons and cyberattacks and what is an actual attack, if you have a denial-of-service attack on a particular business, a bank, is that within the meaning of the international treaties and conventions? we're going to be testing that. we will find out in the future. right now, the president is somewhat uncertain as to what it all means. there are three scenarios for the private sector, and contractors, where there are risks. one is assisting on offensive operations. essentially developing the stuxnet virus, cyber missiles and other ways to attack. what does that mean for international law? what is the authority to attack? generally you have to be attacked before you can then counterattacked. they can be a reprisal, but what is the protection for a government that does it? what are the rules? somewhat unclear. it's even more unclear for contractors that are assisting in developing the cyber weapons, particularly as they go awry. what
in many ways we are on the frontier of this law. the law is old but when you try to apply it to cyber weapons and cyberattacks and what is an actual attack, if you have a denial-of-service attack on a particular business, a bank, is that within the meaning of the international treaties and conventions? we're going to be testing that. we will find out in the future. right now, the president is somewhat uncertain as to what it all means. there are three scenarios for the private sector, and...
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Nov 27, 2012
11/12
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school, what a career in law should be or how they should think about the future of law and what the opportunities are. >> well, it's an obvious answer, but one that a lot of people don't think. the first thing you have to do is ask yourself why you want to go to law school. i think there are a lot of people who go to law school because they are not good at math, and they can't think of anything else to do. [laughter] and they often turn out to be very disappointed lawyers. i suppose the better way to put the question is not so much why you want to go to law school, but why do you want to be a lawyer. you ought to do serious soul searching about that because it's a difficult profession, but, particularly, these days. if you want to go to serve your community, perhaps as a prosecutor, for example, that's a good reason. there's something very gratifying about being able to stand up in court and say that you speak for your country. same is true on the other side. maybe you feel motivated to represent the rights of those people who are accused. that's another good reason. you know, when
school, what a career in law should be or how they should think about the future of law and what the opportunities are. >> well, it's an obvious answer, but one that a lot of people don't think. the first thing you have to do is ask yourself why you want to go to law school. i think there are a lot of people who go to law school because they are not good at math, and they can't think of anything else to do. [laughter] and they often turn out to be very disappointed lawyers. i suppose the...